Councillors say Government ‘reneged’ on infrastructure funding

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Carterton water supply plant at Kaipatangata includes chlorination, UV and filter systems to treat water coming from the Kaipatangata Stream. Promised Government funding was intended to be spent on three waters infrastructure.

PIERS FULLER/Stuff

Carterton water supply plant at Kaipatangata includes chlorination, UV and filter systems to treat water coming from the Kaipatangata Stream. Promised Government funding was intended to be spent on three waters infrastructure.

Wairarapa councils are set to miss out on $22 million in infrastructure funding after Government pulls the pin on Better Off funding.

Carterton District Council’s Audit and Risk Committee has expressed its “profound disappointment” about the government “reneging” on the second tranche of the funding.

Last month, the government withdrew a $1.5 billion sweetener for councils in its reset of the Three Waters Reforms.

The first tranche of funding was allocated in 2022, worth $500m nationally: Carterton got $1.7m, Masterton $3.88m, and South Wairarapa $1.88m.

READ MORE:
* Ōpōtiki to lose over $14 million in funding after Three Waters changes
* Loss of funding another ‘broken promise’
* Councils to lose millions in ‘better off’ funding, Bay of Plenty leaders say

The second tranche, which would have been available from July 2024, was worth $5.1m to Carterton, $11.65m to Masterton, and $5.63m to South Wairarapa.

At last week’s Audit and Risk Committee meeting, Carterton Deputy Mayor Dale Williams said the council should publicly express its “anger” at the “reneged promise”.

“I mean, that was part of the initial bribe to enable council support for the Affordable Waters and Three Waters buy-in,” Williams said.

“The icing on the cake was the two tranches of government investment in our communities.

“To give us 25 per cent, and then decide at a whim to withdraw 75% is just extraordinary, and yet they got away with it.

“I wouldn’t want us to miss the opportunity to say that.”

Councillor Steve Cretney said: “Especially if you used that 25% to start a project you now can’t finish.”

Independent committee chair Philip Jones “totally agreed” with Williams.

“They have got away with it.

“Unfortunately, the government wasn’t giving that money from their own coffers though, they were actually giving it from your coffers.

“They were asking the water entities to fund that second tranche by way of debt.”

He said the fact that the second tranche is now unavailable suggested that the 10 proposed regional water services entities [up from four entities] “won’t be financially viable”.

Larger combined water entities would have been able to borrow more money.

Reflecting on the day the Three Waters reset was announced, Carterton District Council chief executive Geoff Hamilton said the reneging of the second tranche of Better Off funding was “never highlighted, it was buried”.

After discussion, the council’s committee passed a resolution expressing its “profound disappointment of the reneging of the committed tranche two Better Off funding of $5.1m, which poses additional risks to the council”.

Further action on the resolution will be discussed at the next full Carterton District Council meeting.

Responding to similar concerns from councils around New Zealand, Local Government Minister Kieran McAnulty said the government decided not to move ahead with the $1.5b second phase of Better Off funding to meet the additional costs of establishing 10 entities.

It was also to ensure the new entities have the ability to borrow for investment, he said previously.

“Because $1b of the Better Off funding was to have been provided by water services entities borrowing, this will free up the same amount for the entities to invest in their drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater networks.

“The remaining $500m, which was to be funded by the Crown, will instead be used to help offset the higher costs of transition and entity establishment.”

The “no worse off” funding package of $500 million will remain, which will help ensure that no council is left worse off as a result of the costs and financial impacts of the transition process, McAnulty said

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